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xthuijs
Cisco Employee
Cisco Employee

Introduction

In access deployments using RADIUS, during the access-accept we can pass reply items back to the NAS which allows us to configure per user configuration to alter the base template config or to apply extra features. These features normally can't change since RADIUS on itself doesn't allow for reauthorization. For that purpose COA (Change of Authorization) was developed allowing an active session to have its configuration changed based on effectively a new set of reply items that are downloaded to the NAS.

** Download a COA client for windows, MAC or linux below **

Latest version is v3.1 January 2017


The words NAS (network access server), BRAS (Broadband Remote Access Server) and BNG (Broadband next generation) are used interchangeably, they all refer to the same concept of aggregating subscribers.

Typically NAS is used in modem access scenarios, BRAS for PPPoA and PPPoE termination whereas BNG involves the concept of subscriber policies along with IP session termination (including PPPoX).


Core Issue

RADIUS servers are available in open source format on the web, for instance Livingston Radius server or Free Radius server are very popular. Also vendors have provided their own RADIUS servers such as Cisco Secure ACS. However there is not a wide variaty of COA tools out there unless they come with a "portal" type implementation in which COA is generally leveraged a lot. In this article I am presenting a COA tool that can be used from a normal linux station allowing you to pass a COA request to a NAS of your choice. The usage of the tool is explained as well as key parameters that you need to be providing in order to make a successful COA request.

Feature changes support with COA

What features can be changed via COA is highly dependant on the platform and software release that is being run. The COA tool will encapsulate your attributes and send them to the NAS, but it is the NAS's responsibility to apply the features and provide a proper status back on the implementation of it.

Features support in COA tool

  • Up to 10 attributes to be included in the COA request
  • Change of Authorization and Packet of Disconnect support
  • Random source ports or manually configurable
  • Encoding of the cisco-avpair subscriber:password="password" for account logon in VSA 249
  • Extended debug capability
  • Configurable via CLI or Configuration file
  • Request timeout support
  • Multi thread support
  • Encoding of strings, ip addresses and integers
  • Currently support on Linux, and W32. Solaris (solaris no longer supported and maintained!)
  • IPv6 Encoding
  • Various binary ISG codes supported (0A, 0B, 04 etc)

NAS configuration

The minimum configuration required for IOS looks like this

IOS

aaa server radius dynamic-author
client 3.0.0.38
client 3.0.0.1
server-key cisco
auth-type any

client determines from which source ip addresses we can accept a COA request. Sources not in the list will get ignored.

server-key is the encryption key to use for the MD5 authenticator computation and must match what the COA client will be using

auth-type defines which attributes are to be used for session identification.

     For instance, if you provide the Accounting-Session-Id and Username the auth-type any means that the first session found that matches EITHER      one of these check items will be subject to modification.

     Auth-type ALL means that all check items much match

With 4.2.0 IOS-Xr for the ASR9000 will have BNG with COA support also. Here is the configuration required in IOS-XR:

IOS-XR

aaa server radius dynamic-author
port 1700
server-key cisco
auth-type any

client 3.0.0.38 vrf default server-key cisco

A global server key is possible as well as a per client type key is also configurable. The listen port is configurable (same in IOS config omitted, as port 1700 is default in IOS).

COA Check items


To target a specific session you can use various attributes such as Framed-IP-Address, User-Name or Accounting-Session-Id.

It is recommended to always specify the accounting-session-id (attribute 44), the reason for that is that this att references a single session on any BNG as this number must be unique. The internal code lookups are much faster with this attribute then using user-name or framed-ip-address as these result in a lineair walk. Also user-name and FIP (sessions with same ip addr in different vrf's) may not be unique on the device

To provide extra safety to make sure you are targetting the right session, you can configure the auth-type match-all and send Acct-Session-Id (44) as well as a username (1) to have a fast lookup AND the safety that this username is indeed the one that we had in mind altering.

How to find the Accounting-Session-Id

You can lookup the accounting session id in the radius accountign records, but also in IOS or XR you can find the ID rather easily.

Note that the Accounting-Session-Id is generally a string that is perceived to be an integer.

In IOS the radius-record may prefix the acct-session-id STRING with a nas-port identifier like this:

Accounting Record

Thu May 26 10:22:59 2011
        Acct-Session-Id = "1/0/0/100.1_000000BA"
        Cisco-avpair = "ip:sub-qos-policy-out=briana"
        Framed-Protocol = PPP

IOS will strip and only use the 8 right most digits as the accounting session ID. In COA requests you could omit all 0's and just use "BA" for the id, however at the time of writing ios-xr does a string match and wants to see the 8 digits all together.

in IOS

Step 1: Find the subscriber of interest

NPE-G1#show subscr ses
Current Subscriber Information: Total sessions 1

Uniq ID Interface  State         Service      Identifier           Up-time
44      IP         authen        Local Term   0017.0e43.a1ac       00:00:29
45      Traffic-Cl unauthen      Ltm Internal                      00:00:29
46      Traffic-Cl unauthen      Ltm Internal                      00:00:29

NPE-G1#

Step 2: Take the subscribers internal ID and locate its record ID in the AAA databasre

NPE-G1#show subscr ses uid 44 det | i AAA_id
AAA_id 0000001B: Flow_handle 0
NPE-G1#

Step 3: Look into the AAA database for the found record to see what the accounting session id is.

For ISG sessions look at the Parent-Session-Id, for regular subscribers, look at the "session-id"

NPE-G1#sh aaa user 0x1B | i session-id
65684778 0 00000001 session-id(353) 4 48(30)
656848B0 0 00000001 session-id(353) 4 49(31)
656848F0 0 00000009 parent-session-id(352) 8 00000034
NPE-G1#

in IOS-XR

Step 1: Find the subscriber of interest:

RP/0/RSP1/CPU0:A9K-BOTTOM#show subscr sess all
Thu May 26 10:37:17.115 EDT
Codes: IN - Initialize, CN - Connecting, CD - Connected, AC - Activated,
       ID - Idle, DN - Disconnecting, EN - End

Type         Interface                State     Subscriber-IP

                                                LNS Address

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
PPPoE:PTA    BE1001.100.pppoe4        AC        199.1.1.9:default <<<

PPPoE:PTA    BE1001.200.pppoe5        AC        199.1.1.10:RED

IP:DHCP         BE1001.2.ip3                  AC        172.28.15.14:default

PPPoE:LAC    BE1001.300.pppoe6        AC        2.2.2.100

Step 2: Detail the subscriber interface

RP/0/RSP1/CPU0:A9K-BOTTOM#show subscriber session filter interface bundle-e1001.100.pppoe4 detail
Thu May 26 10:38:42.647 EDT
Interface:                Bundle-Ether1001.100.pppoe4
Circuit ID:               Unknown
Remote ID:                "XTH_TEST"
Type:                     PPPoE:PTA
IP Address:               199.1.1.9, VRF: default
Mac Address:              000b.5f2c.ef01
Account-Session Id:       00000067
Nas-Port:                 Unknown
Username:                 test
Subscriber Label:         0x00000067
Created:                  Tue May 24 12:00:57 2011
State:                    Activated
Access-interface:         Bundle-Ether1001.100

<output omitted>

COA Tool Manual

The  COA tool requires you to have a little bit of attribute knowledge in  RADIUS, that is, the attributes are identified by their enummerated  numbers rather then their name. Although you can look at a dictionary  file (attached) to map them should you need that.

The options can be specified all via a CLI, or can be provided in flat config file for ease of use and easy scripting.

The tool supports POD (packet of disconnect) as well as COA requests.

options:

    Option        
Explanation
-n <ip addr> The IP address of the NAS that you want to send this COA request to
-N <ipv6> The IPv6 address of the NAS to be targeted (v3.0 new feature) either provide -n or -N
-p <int> The destination port on the NAS that is listening to COA requests (normally this is 1700)
-k <string> The secret-key that is used for the MD5 HASH computation, this must match the definition on the BNG/NAS router.
-d No sub argument needed, designates the tool to send a POD (packet of  disconnect) request rather then a COA request. If the session is found  it will get terminated.
-t <integer> By default the tool waits indefinitely for a response from the NAS.  The timeout option allows you to wait a number of seconds before the  tool exists
-s <int> Normally a random source port is selected by the tool that is used  to originate the request and listen for a response. If you wish to  specify the source port manually you can use this option. If there is a  single COA request on station X already using source port Q and the tool  is waiting for a response, then a second request cannot use source port  Q if fired from the same station X. An error will be thrown (socket /  bind error).
-f <string> Configuration file that holds the paramters described in a config file
-0/1/2/3/4/5/6/7/8/9

The tool has the option for 6 attributes to be specified. The format is attribute_number,value

The Value is always perceived to be a string value, that means if  there are spaces involved, you need to embrace the string with quotes,  eg 18,"this is a test string"

If you like a certain value to be sent as an integer, for instance  for the Session-Timeout (27), then prefix the value with the word INT

example: 27,INT100 to send an integer value of 100

In case you need to send an ip address such as for Framed-IP-Address then prefix the ip with IP

example: 8,IP255.255.255.254

You can use the sample dictionary file attached to lookup the Attribute name to number to type (int, ip, string)

If you have an IPv6 Address for encoding, you can use the prefix V6 followed by the ipv6 address.

example: 98,"V6fe80::260:1111:feff:ffff"

Framed-IPv6-Prefix is automatically encoded (attribute 97).

-e Decode the response from the NAS into an attribute (integer) and value (string).
-r [0-255] Provide a static requestID, if omitted or out of bounds a random value is generated.
-x Extended debug output, follow what the tool is doing

Note: The bold options must always be provided otherwise the tool can't continue.

Using the Config file


The Tool has the ability to read values from a config file for ease of use. Sample config files will be provided below.

The following is the format of a config file:

Example1:


ip-address=3.0.0.102
secret=cisco
destport=1700
attribute1=44,000029CD
attribute2=26,9,1,subscriber:command=account-logon
attribute3=26,9,1,subscriber:password=cisco
attribute4=1,xander
timeout=1

END

Config file Parameters

Keyword CLI
Description
ip-address

-n

the nas-ip address, the destination ip.
ipv6-address -N the nas-ipv6 address, destination IP of the BNG
secret -k secret key for md5 hash computation
destport -p destination port to send the request to
attribute0 (to 9) -0 to -9 the attributes to be encapsulated
sourceport -s define the source port for the request (optional)
timeout -t To set the timeout waiting for response (optional)
END n/a To denote the END of the config file reading stops after seeing this keyword

Note that parameters provided by CLI are NOT overwritten by the  config file, so the config file has precedence, eg if secret is provided  by cli using the -k CLIKEY and in the config file with secret=CFGKEY then the key used to hash is CFGKEY.

Formatting VSA's

This section described how to format a VSA

The vendor-specific attribute nubmer is 26

Cisco's vendor ID is 9

Cisco has a few VSA's defined such as:

Cisco-avpair, which is vendor attribute 1

Cisco-nas-port, which is vendor attribute 2

A few SSG attributes:

ATTRIBUTE       SSG-Account-Info              250     string  Cisco
ATTRIBUTE       SSG-Service-Info                251     string  Cisco
ATTRIBUTE       SSG-Command-Code         252     string  Cisco
ATTRIBUTE       SSG-Control-Info                253     string  Cisco

Microsoft is vendor 311 and has 2 key attributes commonly used:

ATTRIBUTE       MS-1st-NBNS-Server              30      ipaddr  Microsoft
ATTRIBUTE       MS-2nd-NBNS-Server              31      ipaddr  Microsoft

To provide a vsa into the tool you use the following format:

-1 26,9,1,"ip:ip-unnumbered=Loopback 123"

to send cisco-avpair with the ip unnumbered info

Examples


Account-Logon (config file)

ip-address=3.0.0.102
secret=cisco
destport=1700
attribute1=44,000029CD
attribute2=26,9,1,subscriber:command=account-logon
attribute3=26,9,1,subscriber:password=cisco
attribute4=1,xander
timeout=1

Parameterized QOS (config file)

Adding a parent shaper and a child class with a priority queue policed

ip-address=3.0.0.234
secret=cisco
destport=1700
attribute1=44,000000df
attribute2=26,9,1,subscriber:command=account-update
attribute3=26,9,1,ip:qos-policy-out=add-class(sub, (class-default), shape(800))
attribute4=26,9,1,ip:qos-policy-out=add-class(sub,(class-default, 3play-voip), pri-level(1), police(256,8))
timeout=1

Account-Logoff (cli)

# ./coa_new -n 3.0.0.102 -p 1700 -k cisco -1 44,34 -2 26,9,1,"subscriber:command=account-logoff" -3 1,"0017.0e43.a1ac"

Release Notes

* VERSION 1.0 - first offical RELEASE

* version 1.1 - added random source port and transaction ID generation

* version 1.2 - added POD capability via the -d option

* version 1.3 - added capability for ssg account info converting

*               serivce logoff 0C to binary 0x0C

* version 1.4 - added capability for ssg account info converting

*               service logoff 0B to binary 0x0B

* version 1.5 - fixed bug in length field of attribute size

* version 1.6 - added session query 0x04

* version 1.7 - added timeout receive option -t

* version 1.8 - added manual source port configuration

* version 1.9 - detect integer strings and send them as int rather then string

*               a string prefix of INT tells the program to treat value as int.

* version 1.10- detect ip prefixes and convert accordingly with IP1.2.3.4

* version 2.0 - ability to read config from file with -f

* version 2.1 - fixed subscriber:password length calculation in v2.0

* version 2.2 - improved hexdump, added code comments, cleaned up code

* version 2.3 - added ability to decode the COA/POD response attributes via -e

*               user configurable requestID

* version 2.4 - config file parse chokes on empty line, fixed that issue

* version 2.5 - Adds support for VSA36 with SALT encryption

* version 2.6 - Fixed bug in salt length character

* version 2.7 - Added expanded source port range (+retry), increased attributes

* version 2.8 - Added IPV6 encoding capabilities via V6 prefix keyword

* version 2.9 - Fixed prefix length corruption crash attr 97

* version 3.0 - Added IPv6 transport for sending COA requests to the BNG

* version 3.1 - Fixed integer encoding to proper int formatting (4 bytes)

Related Information

Disclaimer: this is not an official Cisco supported tool but merely provided to verify, demonstrate and integrate COA requests with.

Xander Thuijs, CCIE #6775

Principal Engineer ASR9000

ASR9K news BLOG

Comments
Carlos A. Silva
Level 3
Level 3

Xander,

I was wondering if you could take the time for a very 'open' question.

I think BNG is able to integrate with the Quantum (Broadhop) policy-server to offer stuff like speed boost to customers. But as part of this strategy, my customer is thinking about implementing Parental Control also, hopefully through the same BH product.

Is BNG (in some fashion) able to support Parental Controls? If not, what have you seen Cisco is doing to be able to integrate this function? I've heard SCE/Websense integration is no longer an option, so I was wondering if you could point me in the right direction.

Thanks in advance!

c.

xthuijs
Cisco Employee
Cisco Employee

you can do it multiple ways, either with ACL's but that is not filtering content.

for that you need DPI.

A DPI device is indeed SCE, so if you want to enable PC then you would want to assign/apply an ACL to the subscr

and aBF him towards the SCE.

that is a very common model and supported solution for the asr9000.

cheers!

xander

Carlos A. Silva
Level 3
Level 3

Thanks so much for your reply.

Actually, my company has worked with the SCE and (what used to be) Websense Surfcontrol. This was a few years back. What I'm hearing from local Cisco office is that this is not recommended/supported anymore. So I'm looking for an alternative.

sarmed alkadumi
Level 1
Level 1

Hi Xander,

I was able to use the COA tool to test few things sucessfully on our ASR 9000 BNG, the below command worked for example:

coa_w32.exe -n 10.206.206.2 -p 1700 -k sarmed -1 44,00048a2d -2 26,9,1,"subscriber:sub-qos-policy-in=Bronze-QoS-Policy"

but I cannot activate a dynamic template with it, can you let me know the format required to activate a dynamic template on a subscriber's session ?

Regards,

Sarmed

xthuijs
Cisco Employee
Cisco Employee

hi sarmed,

your dynamic template needs to be of the "service" kind if you want to activate them from access-accept or coa.

then you'd use the avpairs for:

subscriber:command=account-update

subscriber:sa=<service-name>

see also here for more info maybe:

https://supportforums.cisco.com/docs/DOC-35624

xander

sarmed alkadumi
Level 1
Level 1

Hi Xander,

the following worked:

C:\Users\Sarmed-pc\Desktop>coa_w32.exe -n 10.206.206.2 -p 1700 -k sarmed -1 44,00048a2d -2 26,9,1,"subscriber:

sa=xxxx" where xxxx is the dynamic template.

Thanks alot.

Regards,

Sarmed

xthuijs
Cisco Employee
Cisco Employee

very nice sarmed, thanks for letting me know!!

cheers!!

xander

sarmed alkadumi
Level 1
Level 1

Hi Xander,

One more question please, we are trying to get the session information using a COA message from the BNG, we tried to use attribute 250, 252 like the following:

Cisco-SSG-Account-Info=S62.201.235.16

Cisco-SSG-Command-Code=

Reply-Message : No sessions found matching identities provided

we are not getting a session query response from the ASR, is there a way to make this work ?

Thanks.

Regards,

Sarmed

sarmed alkadumi
Level 1
Level 1

Hi Xander,

Our Radius support eng. asked me this question, I did some checking and it seems that this attribute is not supported on the ASR 9000, can you please confirm ?

Regards,

Sarmed

xthuijs
Cisco Employee
Cisco Employee

hi sarmed, one of the biggest mistakes in ISG for IOS was these complex SSG attributes.

fortunately, we have the cleartext vSA's which are much simplier to use.

You can target the subscriber with the Framed-IP-Address or if the mac is part of the username you can use the username.

regards

xander

xthuijs
Cisco Employee
Cisco Employee

yeah correct, the cleartext avp's are easier to use anyway.

regards

xander

sarmed alkadumi
Level 1
Level 1

Hi Xander,

we tried using the following:

cisco-avpair : "subscriber:command=session-query"

Acct-Session-Id : 00056286

the only thing we get in response is wether ther session is active or not, is there a command that returns back the complete session parameters like the one available in ISG ?

Regards,

Sarmed

xthuijs
Cisco Employee
Cisco Employee

hi sarmed,

ah I see what you're trying to do, at this point session query is not yet supported. Track CSCuc45110 which I filed for the integration.

At this point there is no way to "account ping" the session via COA. You can do some scripted (that is via telnet/ssh) query eg the routing table to find out the subscriber interface, which then can be used as a parameter as filter in teh show subscriber session idenifier command to get the session-ID.

xander

elnur.mammadov
Level 1
Level 1

Hi Xander

is there a way to extract IP subscriber session state via

XML API/SNMP/CoA on 5.1.1 / 5.1.2 / 5.2.0? 

I particular I'm interested in extracting services activated per session, the below document lists some interesting XML objects but they it come out empty on 5.1.1/5.1.2, do I need to configure anything for that information to get populated?

Also what is the purpose of a subscriber-label? XML seem to refer to it. 

http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/routers/asr9000/software/asr9k_r5-1/bng/configuration/guide/b_bng_cg51xasr9k/b_bng_cg51xasr9k_appendix_01000.html 

 

Thank you

 

xthuijs
Cisco Employee
Cisco Employee

Unfortunately not yet Elnur.

We have a requirement open for a "session-query" that will get you a response in COA with the services, session id and all that info returned.

today the only option is a show subscriber session [filter <filter criteria>] detail to get the session service details, but it requires some bit of screen scraping.

the subscriber label is an internal reference that is like a session ID in AAA/radius, that links the subscriber components together such as dhcp lease, iedge record, etc etc. it is just an internal label/reference.

All traces inside XR pertaining to BNG leverage that label so we/you can easily link the different events together from different traces.

cheers!

xander

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